380. We are very pressed for time and I apologise
for that. I have one final question I would like to ask Lord Weatherill
because of what he has done. You were the person who found a civilised
way of killing off the hereditaries. I would just like to know
if you have thought of a civilised way of killing off what you
might call the patronage Peers without them noticing?
(Lord Weatherill) I have.

381. Could you tell us about it?
(Lord Weatherill) We are in a mess, we all know it
is a mess, and everybody wants to do something about it. It is
obvious that we are going to have to find some sort of compromise.
In order to give us time to do this, and it does mean genuine
all-Party talks, a Bill should be introduced to abolish the hereditary
Peers in the House of Lords. I think that would satisfy the House
of Commons, would it not? But I think concurrent with that, the
hereditary Peers currently there should be made life Peers. Yes,
life Peers.

382. What I am asking you is
(Lord Weatherill) We have got the status quo
then, have we not?

383. I know but I am asking you for help. I
am assuming that if we do not stay with the statusquo,
which is a possibility, you know, and if we are asked to consider
a different approach involving perhaps a substantial chunk of
elected people, then we have a problem with the existing numbers
of life Peers or patronage Peers. I am wondering if you have turned
your inventive mind to what to do with them?
(Lord Weatherill) I suppose you could bribe them to
go. But most of us were appointed for life. If I may remind you,
Chairman, my peerage came from the House of Commons, it did not
come from Number Ten. It was a motion on the Order Paper of the
Commons and you would have to go back to the Commons for this
agreement and say we agree about this.

384. I think we almost certainly would.
(Lord Weatherill) Would you? Oh. I think, to be absolutely
sensible about this, I am now 81, going on 65 really. I do not
think that people of my age should be here. I think there should
be a retiring age of round about 75, but this must all be part
of an overall review of the whole Parliamentary system. This can
be done. The collective wisdom of this place is very great and
I regularly used to say of my time in the House of Commons that
if we ever had free votes, when the Whips were taken off, then
the collective wisdom of members was very great. Could we not
come to a collective decision on this? I am sure we could, but
it needs time, and it does need all-Party talks and reform of
the whole parliamentary system, not just one part of it.

385. I have been offered two final contributions
and I have got a fretting Lord Chancellor. Could you be very quick
the two of you.
(Mr Tyler) Lord Weatherill's proposal relates to appointed
life Peers. That does not necessarily mean they have a seat in
the future second chamber, whatever it is called, so you could
still have life Peers calling themselves life Peers but you would
not give them a job in Parliament.
(Mr Tyrie) Lord Weatherill has just suggested a new
way of getting rid of the life Peers, which as I understand it,
is "cash for no questions"! Pay them 50K and ask them
to go away after a time. Again, I do think this transitional issue
is exaggerated. If you look at the average participation rates
of 80-year-old plus Peers, you will find that it is around a quarter
and it is under half for those over 70. The average age of the
life peerage is higher than the hereditary peerage. If you stripped
out the hereditary peerage it is 70 already. This is a problem
that is going to go away in a decade anyway.

386. That is a rather macabre note on which
to end. We are very, very grateful to you. I am sorry that we
could not have had you for longer which we would have liked to
have done. Thank you very much indeed.
(Lord Weatherill) I hope this is not goodbye, Chairman!